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August 19, 2010

New Orleans Film Society and the Contemporary Arts Center present THE GIANT WOMAN AND THE LIGHTNING MAN & MONEY MAN

Contemporary Arts Center, 900 Camp St.

7.30pm


New Orleans Film Society and the Contemporary Arts Center present THE GIANT WOMAN AND THE LIGHTNING MAN & MONEY MAN // August 5, 2010
THE GIANT WOMAN AND THE LIGHTNING MAN

Philip Haas's eye-popping film on Australian Aboriginal art, takes us through the steps of preparing three ground paintings made by a group of desert tribesman. The film shows the collective effort and cooperation required to make the art. The beauty of the finished pieces - so ancient and so modern - is stunning. The northern Australian Aboriginal bark painters' "studio" and "gallery" are dramatically different from that of the desert people. Here, making art is a solitary activity. Haas follows two brothers as they painstakingly prepare their bark canvasses and brushes and then paint two pieces. Both northern and desert Aborigines include body painting as part of their art, and the men perform ritual dances accompanied by Aboriginal musical instruments. Directed by Philip Haas. USA. 1989. 53 min.

MONEY MAN

In a darkened room, a man photocopies money - greenbacks, cash. He stamps each bill with the green "Department of Treasury" seal. He adds serial numbers. He signs and then carefully cuts out each note and stacks it in a briefcase - a silver briefcase filled with bills - thousands of them. The man takes his currency to a motorcycle dealership where he selects a Harley. With five $1,000 bills he pays the cashier...

J.S.G. Boggs is an artist whose medium is money. Boggs' "dollars" have been confiscated as counterfeit by the U.S. Treasury Department. He has been arrested by the Bank of England. The Australian government has expressed that his company is unwanted. Because, for Boggs, his art is not just making money. No piece is complete until it is spent. Money Man is an exploration of the curious and controversial artwork of Boggs, who was profiled in a two-part article by writer Lawrence Weschler in The New Yorker in 1987. Boggs explores that most American and yet universal subject - money. With each note that he tries to spend, Boggs asks us to question why one piece of paper (like that "officially recognized" limited-edition engraving, the dollar) has intrinsic value, while a similar piece of art, like a Boggs bill, may or may not. "In God we trust," indeed? Director: Philip Haas. USA. 1992. 60 min.

NOFS and CAC members $6, general admission $8
Thursday, August 19, 7.30pm

ALL EVENTS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE